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ANKARA: Turkish PM to Yerevan: Lets Open Archives and Accept Results

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  • ANKARA: Turkish PM to Yerevan: Lets Open Archives and Accept Results

    Zaman, Turkey
    April 28 2005



    Turkish PM to Yerevan: Let's Open the Archives and Accept the Results


    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan invited Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian, who offered an intergovernmental
    commission into the so-called genocide allegations, to open the
    archives before making any political decisions.

    Turkey has opened the Ottoman Empire archives in an attempt to
    clarify the incidents that occurred in 1915, Erdogan said:

    "You cannot reach any conclusions by lobbying. Here we are. If you
    are speaking according to your archives, open them and let the
    political scientists and historians deal with them."

    Demanding that Yerevan take conscious and scientific steps based on
    the documents, the Turkish Prime Minister emphasized that, "We, as a
    country, are ready to accept the consequences; however, the Armenians
    should be ready to accept them as well." The European Council also
    supported Erdogan's suggestion to form a commission comprising of
    both Turkish and Armenian historians. The Parliamentary Assembly of
    the European Council called on Kocharian to make a positive response
    to the suggestion in a written notice that included the signatures of
    104 parliamentarians. The Armenian President responded to Erdogan's
    letter suggesting a joint commission comprising of Turkish and
    Armenian historians the other day. Kocharian hoping to build
    diplomatic relations, and reopen the borders and begin a process of
    dialogue between the two countries wrote in the letter that the
    responsibility to develop mutual relations belonged to both
    governments and they had no right to leave that responsibility in the
    hands of historians. The Armenian President also added in his letter
    that an intergovernmental commission could be formed to deal with all
    kinds of issues or to solve any significant problems by compromising.


    Erdogan evaluated Kocharian's letter following his meeting with New
    Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark on April 27. Erdogan revealed that
    he read the letter sentence by sentence and said that the incidents
    should first be clarified before making any political decisions.
    Erdogan also expressed that this would occur through a thorough
    examination of the archives: "Our arguments are based on the
    documents. We are not a nation denying its history and our history
    never left us on the ground." The Prime Minister emphasized that he
    could not understand why the Armenians who had insisted on bringing
    the so-called genocide allegations to the agenda around the world had
    in the past refused to open their achieves.
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